BUILDTHEFENCE

GM, Ford, and everyone else to be able to sell directly to the customer.

There is benefits for dealerships. Test driving multiple new models and whatever. Even more so for used cars that may not run as well or have some damage not extremely obvious.

In a perfect world, you could do either. Dealerships probably will threaten to shut down if car companies start shipping to local customers; who knows how that will work out. But I agree, drop the law, let the car companies sort it out - Tesla wants to eliminate dealerships and that's fine by me, I'd still buy from them.

I like it better than the belle isle foot bridge, which feels like it's swaying. If you've ever done a race across that thing with hundreds of people on it, it ABSOLUTELY is swaying back and forth, a bit unnerving.

I don't have any advise, but only agreement on the frustration. I'm no longer a sys admin role, but some 10 years ago after using fairly stable Zenworks in a Novell enviroment, I arrived in a Windows enviroment and had nothing but trouble, despite the simplicity of .msi packages instead of Novell's before/after capture of installation changes.

Moving out special: I'll let you go from 1 year lease renewals to month to month if you buy with me, and throw in some other bonus/incentive... maybe a $1k allowance on professional movers (damages to his places during moveout less likely) or free professional cleaners going through your apartment for an hour covered.

Had a similar situation where one of those assholes from Seibert's had me hooked up. We started arguing, he got distracted and started pointing at the chalk on my tire, so I decked him from behind and KO'd him.

The controls aren't that hard to operate, and I wasn't chained in. Lowered my car and drove away. This was about 5 years ago, been pulled over again since, no mention of it.

IT employment will always be there. The one field I see taking a large hit is programming. Once computers learn to code themselves reliably, many will be out of a job. There's plenty of time to fine a sub-sect has less likelyhood of being automated... for example, nations will always be trying to hack each other, network equipment will always need someone to physically install them, and "big data" will only get bigger, more complex, and need database experts to run, manage, and mine data from it.

If you look at /r/learnprogramming, some claim 6 months. Others say you will absolutely need a degree. The norm is probably somewhere in between. You can learn to code from free online universities but I would recommend community college to give it a try. Hell, some community colleges probably have a certificate program.

I think Russia would be way to aggressive. China would probably do better than us. They are peaceful, unaggresive, and I can't recall them doing anything besides questionable economic policies for 50 years

The consistency this seems to happened to older married woman is very alarming... I've got a great fit girlfriend now but many men thought they were marrying someone who would stay fit their whole life, and ended up with a warpig.

I've watched an ex get married and start to let it go a bit and she's in her early 30s